Kazakh man linked to Boston suspect a normal teen'

A view of a school in Almaty, the largest Kazakhstan city on Friday, May 3, 2013. At the Kazakh school where Dias Kadyrbayev who was arrested in connection with the Boston Marathon bombings attended when he was 14 and 15, Deputy principal Yuri Dovgal said Friday: "He wasnít a star student, but he wasnít a hooligan. He was a normal teenager." (AP Photo/Abylay Saralayev)

ALMATY, Kazakhstan — Former teachers of one of the students from Kazakhstan arrested in connection with the Boston Marathon bombings described him on Friday as an easygoing teenager who distinguished himself mainly by his failing grades in math and science.

Dias Kadyrbayev was a university friend of bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. He and another 19-year-old student from oil-rich Kazakhstan, Azamat Tazhayakov, have been charged with trying to destroy evidence by allegedly disposing of a backpack and laptop computer taken from Tsarnaev’s dorm room after learning he was a suspect in the attack.

When he was 14 and 15, Kadyrbayev attended a high school in Almaty, the business capital of Kazakhstan, for students gifted in mathematics.

“He wasn’t a star student, but he wasn’t a hooligan; he was a normal teenager,” teacher and deputy principal Yuri Dovgal said. The schoolwork proved too much for Kadyrbayev, however, and he flunked out after his first year.

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“He had no aptitude for physics or mathematics, but that doesn’t mean he was bad,” Dovgal said, adding that Kadyrbayev later graduated from an elite private school.

According to school records, Kadyrbayev’s father was a top official in Kazakhstan’s postal service at the time.

His father, Murat Kadyrbayev, said in a brief television interview that his son never got into fights and wasn’t religious.

Kazakhstan, where most Muslims practice a moderate strain of Islam, has experienced less religious-based tension than other former Soviet nations in Central Asia. The past two years, however, have seen a surge in violence related to Islamist extremism, primarily in the west of the country.

“He absolutely was never ever in touch with any of these radicals,” the father said in the interview broadcast Thursday on Russian state television. “He doesn’t go to the mosque and in America he has never been to a mosque.”

The report said he was speaking from Atyrau, an oil producing center in western Kazakhstan.

Tazhayakov’s father is a prominent businessman in Atyrau, according to Kazakh media reports.

Another teacher at the school, Saule Zhamisheva, also said the young Kadyrbayev was kind and friendly.

“We don’t believe he could have had any kind of evil thoughts,” she said.